Once upon a time there was a
father with three sons who had reached the age when they must go out
into the world to earn their own living. When the time for parting
came he gave to each of them a large melon with the advice that they
open the melons only at a place where there was water nearby.
The three brothers set out from their father's house, each taking a
different path. As soon as the eldest son was out of sight of the
house he opened his melon. A beautiful maiden sprang out of the
melon saying, "Give me water or give me milk." There was no water
nearby and neither did the young man have any milk to give her. She
fell down dead.
The second son left his father's house by a path which led over a
steep hill. The large melon was heavy to carry and in a little while
he became very tired and thirsty. He saw no water nearby and feared
that there was no possibility of finding any soon, so he thought he
would open the melon and use it to quench his thirst. Accordingly he
opened his melon. To his great surprise, a beautiful maiden sprang
forth saying, "Give me water or give me milk." Of course he had
neither to give her and she fell down dead.
The third son also travelled by a path which led over a steep hill.
He, too, became very tired and thirsty and he often thought how much
he would like to open his melon. However, he remembered his father's
advice to open it only where there was water nearby. So he travelled
on and on hoping to find a spring of water on the hillside. He did
not have the good fortune to pass near a spring either going up the
hill or coming down on the opposite side. At the foot of the hill
there was a town and in the centre of the town there was a fountain.
The young man hurried straight to the fountain and took a long
refreshing drink. Then he opened his melon. A beautiful maiden
sprang forth saying, "Give me water or give me milk." The young man
gave her a drink of water. Then he helped her to a hiding place
among the thick branches of the tree which grew beside the fountain
and went away in search of food.
Soon a little servant girl came to the fountain to fill a big
water jar which she carried on her head. The maiden in the tree
above the fountain peeped out through the branches. When the little
servant girl bent over the water to fill her jar she saw the
reflection of a charming face in the water. "How beautiful I have
become," she said to herself. "How ridiculous that any one as
beautiful as I am should carry water on her head." She threw her
water jar upon the ground in disdain and it broke into a thousand
pieces.
When the little maid reached home with neither water nor water jar
her mistress punished her severely and sent her again to the
fountain with a new water jar to fill. This time the maiden in the
tree gave a little silvery laugh when the servant girl bent
over the water. The little maid looked up and spied her in the tree.
"O, it is you, is it, who are responsible for my beating?" she said.
She pulled a pin out of her camisa and, reaching up, she stuck it
savagely into the beautiful maiden in the tree. Then a strange thing
happened. There was no longer any beautiful maiden in the tree.
There was just a pigeon there.
At that moment the young man came back to the tree with the food he
had procured. When the little maid heard his footsteps she was
frightened nearly to death. She hid herself quickly among the thick
branches of the tree. The young man was very much surprised to find
a little maid in the tree in the place of the beautiful maiden
he had left there. "What has happened to you during my absence" he
asked in horror as soon as he saw her. "The sun has burned my
complexion. That is all. It is nothing. I shall be myself again when
I get away from this hot place," the little maid replied.
The young man married the little maid and took her away out of
sunny places hoping that she would soon be again the beautiful
maiden she was when he left her by the fountain in search of food.
Years passed and the young man became very rich. He lived in a
beautiful mansion. All around the house there was a wonderful garden
full of lovely flowers and splendid trees where birds loved to sing
sweet songs and build their nests. In spite of his beautiful home
the young man was not very happy. He often walked up and down the paths in his
garden at the close of the day and thought about how beautiful his
wife had been the first time he ever saw her. As he walked in the
garden there was always a pigeon which followed him about. It flew
about his head in a way that annoyed him, so one day when his wife
was sick and asked for a pigeon to be roasted for her dinner he
commanded that this particular pigeon should be killed.
When the cook was preparing the pigeon for her mistress to eat for
dinner she noticed a black speck on the pigeon's breast. She thought
that it was a speck of dirt and tried to brush it away. To her
surprise she could not brush it off easily because it was a pin
firmly embedded in the pigeon's breast. She pulled and pulled but
could not pull it out so she sent for her master to come and see
what he could do to remove it. He at once pulled out the pin and
then a wonderful thing happened. The pigeon was transformed into a
beautiful maiden. He at once recognised her as the same lovely
maiden who had sprung forth from his melon by the fountain and whom
he had left hidden in the tree.
When the young man's wife learned that her husband had found
the beautiful maiden again after all these years she confessed her
deceit and soon died. The young man married the beautiful maiden who
was still just as beautiful as she was the first time he saw her.
They were very happy together but the wife never forgot about the
time she had been a pigeon.
Up to that time pigeons had been wild birds who built their nests in
the deep forest. The wife often wished that they would build their
nests in her beautiful garden so she had little bird houses built
and set up there.
One day a pigeon, bolder than the rest, flew through the garden and
spied the little bird houses. He moved his family there at once and
told the other pigeons that there were other houses there for them
too. The other pigeons were timid and so they waited to see what
terrible calamity might happen to the bold pigeon and his family,
but not a single unpleasant thing occurred. They were just as happy
as happy could be in their new home.
After a while other pigeon families moved into the garden and were
happy too. Thus it came about that after years and years the pigeons
no longer build their nests in the deep forest, but they always make
their homes near the homes of men. The pigeons, themselves, do not
know how it all came about, but the beautiful woman who was once a
pigeon, when she had children of her own, told them about it, and
they told their children. Thus it happens that the mothers in Brazil
tell their children this story about the pigeon.